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Environmental Problems, Their Causes, and Sustainability

Environmental Problems, Their Causes, and Sustainability. Chapter 1. Core Case Study: Living in an Exponential Age. Impact of human exponential growth on Loss of animal and plant species Loss of resources. Exponential Growth. 13. 12. 11. 10. 9. ?. 8. 7. Billions of people. 6. 5.

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Environmental Problems, Their Causes, and Sustainability

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  1. Environmental Problems, Their Causes, and Sustainability Chapter 1

  2. Core Case Study: Living in an Exponential Age • Impact of human exponential growth on • Loss of animal and plant species • Loss of resources

  3. Exponential Growth

  4. 13 12 11 10 9 ? 8 7 Billions of people 6 5 4 3 Industrial revolution 2 Black Death—the Plague 1 0 2–5 million years 8000 6000 4000 2000 2000 2100 Time B. C. A. D. Hunting and gathering Agricultural revolution Industrial revolution Fig. 1-1, p. 5

  5. 1-1 What Is an Environmentally Sustainable Society? • Concept 1-1A Our lives and economies depend on energy from the sun (solar capital) and on natural resources and natural services (natural capital) provided by the earth. • Concept 1-1B Living sustainability means living off the earth’s natural income without depleting or degrading the natural capital that supplies it.

  6. Environmental Science Is a Study of Connections in Nature (1) • Interdisciplinary science connecting information and ideas from • Natural sciences, with an emphasis on ecology • Social sciences • Humanities

  7. Sustainability Is the Central Theme of This Book • Natural capital: supported by solar capital • Natural resources • Natural services • E.g., nutrient cycling • Degradation of natural capital through human activities • Scientific solutions

  8. NATURAL CAPITAL Natural Capital = Natural Resources + Natural Services Solar capital Air Air purification Renewable energy (sun, wind, water flows) Climate control UV protection (ozone layer) Life (biodiversity) Water Population control Water purification Waste treatment Pest control Nonrenewable minerals iron, sand) Land Soil Food production Soil renewal Natural gas Nutrient recycling Oil Coal seam Nonrenewable energy (fossil fuels) Natural resources Natural services Fig. 1-3, p. 8 Fig. 1-3, p. 8

  9. 1-2 How Can Environmentally Sustainable Societies Grow Economically? • Concept 1-2 Societies can become more environmentally sustainable through economic development dedicated to improving the quality of life for everyone without degrading the earth's life support systems.

  10. There Is a Wide Economic Gap between Rich and Poor Countries • Country’s economic growth: measured by gross domestic product (GDP) • Changes in economic growth: measured by per capita GDP • Purchasing power parity (PPP) plus GDP are combined for per capita GDP PPP • Compare developed with developing countries

  11. Percentage of World's: 18% Population 82% 0.12% Population growth 1.46% 77 years Life expectancy 67 years 85% Wealth and income 15% Resource use 88% 12% 75% Pollution and waste 25% Developed countries Developing countries Fig. 1-5, p. 11

  12. Extreme Poverty in a Developing Country

  13. 1-3 How Are Our Ecological Footprints Affecting the Earth? • Concept 1-3 As our ecological footprints grow, we are depleting and degrading more of the earth’s natural capital.

  14. Some Sources Are Renewable Renewable resource E.g., forests, grasslands, fresh air, fertile soil Sustainable yield Environmental degradation

  15. Overexploiting Shared Renewable Resources: Tragedy of the Commons • Three types of property or resource rights • Private property • Common property • Open access renewable resources • Tragedy of the commons • Solutions

  16. Some Resources Are Not Renewable • Nonrenewable resources • Energy resources • Metallic mineral resources • Nonmetallic mineral resources • Reuse • Recycle

  17. Our Ecological Footprints Are Growing • Ecological footprint concept • Biological capacity • Ecological footprint

  18. Total Ecological Footprint (million hectares) and Share of Global Ecological Capacity (%) Per Capita Ecological Footprint (hectares per person) 2,810 (25%) 9.7 United States United States European Union European Union 4.7 2,160 (19%) China China 1.6 2,050 (18%) India India 780 (7%) 0.8 Japan Japan 4.8 540 (5%) Projected footprint Earth's ecological capacity Number of Earths Ecological footprint Fig. 1-10, p. 15

  19. 1-4 What Is Pollution and What Can We Do about It? • Concept 1-4 Preventing pollution is more effective and less costly than cleaning up pollution.

  20. Pollution Comes from a Number of Sources • Sources of pollution • Point • E.g., smokestack • Nonpoint • E.g., pesticides blown into the air • Main type of pollutants • Biodegradable • Nondegradable • Unwanted effects of pollution

  21. 1-5 Why Do We Have Environmental Problems? (1) • Concept 1-5A Major causes of environmental problems are population growth, wasteful and unsustainable resource use, poverty, exclusion of environmental costs of resource use from the market prices of goods and services, and attempts to manage nature with insufficient knowledge.

  22. Causes of Environmental Problems

  23. Some Harmful Results of Poverty

  24. Affluence Has Harmful and Beneficial Environmental Effects • Harmful environmental impact due to • High levels of consumption • Unnecessary waste of resources • Affluence can provide funding for • Developing technologies to reduce • Pollution • Environmental degradation • Resource waste

  25. Prices Do Not Include the Value of Natural Capital • Companies do not pay the environmental cost of resource use • Goods and services do not include the harmful environmental costs • Companies receive tax breaks and subsidies • Economy may be stimulated but there may be a degradation of natural capital

  26. We Can Work Together to Solve Environmental Problems • Social capital • Encourages • Openness and communication • Cooperation • Hope • Discourages • Close-mindedness • Polarization • Confrontation and fear

  27. Case Study: The Environmental Transformation of Chattanooga, TN • Environmental success story: example of building their social capital • 1960: most polluted city in the U.S. • 1984: Vision 2000 • 1995: most goals met • 1993: Revision 2000

  28. Chattanooga, Tennessee

  29. Individuals Matter: Aldo Leopold • 5–10% of the population can bring about major social change • Aldo Leopold: environmental ethics • A leader of the conservation and environmental movements of the 20th century • Land ethic • Wrote: A Sand County Almanac • Anthropologist Margaret Mead • Rachel Carson • Wrote Silent Spring • DDT

  30. 1-6 What Are Four Scientific Principles of Sustainability? • Concept 1- 6 Nature has sustained itself for billions of years by using solar energy, biodiversity, population control, and nutrient cycling—lessons from nature that we can apply to our lifestyles and economies.

  31. Studying Nature Reveals Four Scientific Principles of Sustainability • Reliance on solar energy • Biodiversity • Population control • Nutrient cycling

  32. Four Scientific Principles of Sustainability

  33. Solutions For Environmental or Sustainability Revolution

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